I’ve chosen FPGA design over authenticity, but you’re welcome to change the design however you like (it’s open source): This design is not based on the detail of the original Pong gameplay. If you’d like to learn more about the early history of Atari, including Pong, I recommend the book Racing the Beam by Nick Montfort and Ian Bogost. You can also watch Pong gameplay on YouTube. The Pong Story explains the history of Atari Pong and includes a detailed PDF on the design: Atari Pong E Circuit Analysis & Lawn Tennis. Originally an arcade cabinet, it was quickly adapted for play at home with a television. Pong may not have been the first computer game, but it has an excellent claim to being the first to break into public consciousness on release in 1972. Photo by Sergey Galyonkin under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike licence. See requirements from Beginning FPGA Graphics for more details. I include everything you need for the iCEBreaker with 12-Bit DVI Pmod, Digilent Arty A7-35T with Pmod VGA, and Verilator Simulation with SDL. You should be to run these designs on any recent FPGA board. My hardware designs are open source, and my blog is advert free. I love FPGAs and want to help more people discover and use them in their projects. If you like what I do, consider sponsoring me on GitHub. Animated Shapes - animation and double-buffering.2D Shapes - filled shapes and simple pictures.
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